Ghana has been ranked among Africa’s leading interest rate-cutting countries after implementing one of the continent’s largest monetary policy reductions over the past year, according to the African Development Bank‘s (AfDB) 2026 African Economic Outlook.
The report identifies Ghana as one of only four African countries that reduced benchmark policy rates by at least eight percentage points as inflationary pressures eased across the continent.
The ranking places Ghana alongside Sierra Leone, Egypt and the Democratic Republic of Congo among Africa’s most aggressive rate-cutting economies.
One of Africa’s Biggest Rate Reductions
According to the AfDB, Ghana’s Monetary Policy Rate (MPR) fell from 28.0 percent in January 2025 to 14.0 percent by March 2026.
The 14-percentage-point reduction represents one of the largest policy rate cuts recorded in Africa during the period under review.
The report noted that declining inflation across many African economies created opportunities for central banks to ease previously tight monetary policies introduced to control inflation and stabilize currencies.
Economic Recovery Supports Policy Shift
The sharp reduction reflects improving macroeconomic conditions in Ghana, including lower inflation, relative exchange rate stability and growing confidence in the country’s economic recovery programme.
The move also signals a shift by the Bank of Ghana from an aggressive inflation-control strategy toward a more accommodative policy approach aimed at supporting economic growth and private sector activity.
Analysts say the policy adjustment is intended to improve financing conditions and stimulate investment across the economy.
Ghana Still Among High-Rate Economies
Despite the substantial reduction, Ghana continues to maintain one of the highest benchmark interest rates on the continent.
The AfDB report indicates that Ghana’s policy rate of 14.0 percent remains above those of most African countries and is surpassed only by a handful of economies, including Zimbabwe, Nigeria, Malawi, Egypt, Angola, Sierra Leone and Liberia.
The ranking highlights the delicate balance central banks continue to manage between controlling inflation and promoting growth.
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Lending Rates Gradually Responding
Although policy rates have declined sharply, the impact on borrowing costs has been slower.
Bank of Ghana data show that the average lending rate fell from 20.58 percent in January 2026 to 16.33 percent in April 2026.
While financing conditions are improving, lending rates remain above the policy benchmark, suggesting that the full effects of the rate cuts are still filtering through the banking system.
Cautious Approach Maintained
Despite progress in reducing inflation, the Bank of Ghana has adopted a cautious stance in recent months.
At its May 2026 Monetary Policy Committee meeting, the central bank maintained the policy rate at 14.0 percent while monitoring inflation risks, commodity price movements and broader economic developments.
The decision reflects efforts to safeguard recent gains in macroeconomic stability while supporting sustainable economic growth.
Looking Ahead
The AfDB believes Ghana’s position among Africa’s top rate-cutting nations reflects broader improvements in economic conditions and policy confidence.
However, economists say the true success of the monetary easing cycle will depend on how quickly lower rates translate into reduced borrowing costs, stronger business activity and sustained economic expansion in the months ahead.




















